73 Frost
19 Age of Kings
19 Age of Kings
The smell of herbal tea was a sharp but welcome scent. Malcolm leaned over the steaming mug, allowing it to warm his face, almost able to forget the foot of snow that had fallen outside during the night. Jared dragged a chair from under the table to join him, raking a blunt butter knife over a piece of thick, toasted bread. Malcolm had long called the Baron of Warrick his friend, their relationship stretching back to his teen years. It seemed a lifetime ago that they had raced out into the snow on a morning much like this one, to build forts and hurtle snowballs at one another, Malcolm’s brothers in tow. Now the idea of facing the brisk and unforgiving cold of Frost was the last thing either of them looked forward to.
“How did you sleep?” Malcolm asked.
“Your guest bed creaks,” Jared told him.
Malcolm smiled, offering a coy, almost guilty look. “Everything creaks around here,” he said.
“Early warning system,” came Jared’s quick retort.
“Oh?” Malcolm looked across at him a little confused.
“In case someone is having more fun than you.”
Malcolm laughed. “No fun in this house.”
“Not since Vanessa?” Jared asked.
“Not ever,” Malcolm admitted. “Vanessa was never far from Mayce once we were wed.”
“A dutiful woman,” Jared remarked, to which Malcolm only smiled.
With breakfast consumed and the dishes washed and put away, Malcolm stoked the fire, adding another log before the pair of them dressed and got ready to face the cold world beyond the snug confinement of the cottage. Jared pulled on his boots and took a woollen hat from his pack to don before stepping outside. In his gloved hands he held a pruning tool, ready to best demonstrate to Malcolm how the grapevines should be trimmed and prepared for the season of Bloom.
Malcolm followed in his warmest winter gear and a sturdy pair of leather boots, finished with a watertight stain that kept the insides dry. The stitching was waxed to make sure nothing got in to chill his toes to the bone through his thick woollen socks. He pulled on his tabard and a short but heavy cloak, braced for the world beyond the comforts of the cabin, and followed his friend out into the field.
The grapevines lay dormant, stripped of their summer leaves. “In Bloom they will do most of their growing,” Jared had explained, “so don’t be alarmed by how much we take off today,” he said. Jared pruned back one of the vines heavily, leaving two canes exposed. “We train these into the new arms,” he demonstrated, “and next winter we will have more canes to choose from, where we do exactly the same thing as we are today.”
Malcolm watched, quick to pick up what his friend was teaching. They tied the new arms down to the wire Malcolm had trained between the posts some years prior, and worked their way along the vines, keeping their work neat and tidy.